Under half (48%) of Australians have heard of ChatGPT, and almost a quarter (23%) have interacted with the AI chatbot, according to YouGov Surveys: Serviced research.
New study by Perkbox reveals misalignment in recognition and reward in the workplace. Workers are generally unhappy with rewards while senior managers believing staff are well-rewarded.
One in three Australians have started a small business or ‘side hustle’ since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic or plan to start one in the next 12 months, according to a new research study just released by the Commonwealth Bank.
GUEST RESEARCH: According to 97% of accountants and bookkeepers surveyed in a new report, unrecovered out of scope work is costing Australian firms on average over $100,000 each year. What’s more, by putting off awkward client conversations, 43% say their mental health has suffered.
GUEST RESEARCH: me&u partners with expert friends to unveil future-gazing hospitality report, with meta-mealtimes, satisfied staff and putting the end to hospo-ghosting key to future proofing the industry.
Despite a growing emphasis on workplace wellbeing and inclusion, one in two workers still lack confidence to go back to work and feel that lip service is being paid to their mental health, according to a survey conducted by YouGov on behalf of the Australian College of Applied Professions.
44% of Australians regularly feel lonely. Nine in ten have experienced loneliness with almost half are embarrassed to talk about it, according to Telstra’s Talking Loneliness report. As a response, Telstra urged the public to be more open and start talking about loneliness, and acknowledge it.
Australian teenagers want to easily delete their online profiles, saying they’re targeted with hyper-specific ads that make them uncomfortable, and are not aware what platforms have access to their private data, according to not-for-profit charity Reset Australia.
60-up Australians are following an increasingly digital lifestyle, according to a survey, and it's likely to stay that way post-pandemic.
Not-for-profit charity Reset Australia reports that Terms and Conditions of popular apps such as TikTok, Instagram, and Snapchat are too difficult for children to read and would require a university degree to understand it. The report gave one platform 2.5 out of 5 stars, and gave two apps a score of zero in terms of readability.
Identity platfform provider Auth0 and market research and data analytics firm YouGov’s latest study finds that consumers are most likely to sign up to an app or an online service if it offers multi-factor authentication, single sign-on, biometrics, social logins, and if it requires no password.
Market research and data analytics firm YouGov claims 75% of Britons do not know that their government will put curbs on accessing online pornography from April onwards – and those who are aware of it, think the government's attempts will fail.
More than half (51%) of Australian workers are fearful about losing their jobs due to the impact of technologies like artificial intelligence and automation, according to new research released to coincide with the official opening of Swinburne University of Technology’s new Centre for the New Workforce.
A survey that covered 10 cities in the Americas, Europe, and the Asia-Pacific region has revealed that residents of Sydney are strongly against 24-hour surveillance, except when it comes to airports.
The "YouGov BrandIndex" has announced its 2017 Brand Advocacy Rankings in Australia, showing Netflix’s customers are the strongest advocates of any brand in Australia.
A third (35%) of Aussies have used Internet and online dating apps, with the number using the apps rising to half among millennials.
Facebook, Netflix and Instagram achieved the highest positive Word of Mouth Scores in Australia in the latest YouGov brand index.
Australian bank customers would prefer to resolve their basic banking issues without having to deal with a human being, according to a new survey which indicates that most prefer contact with their bank via its website.
Credit card company Visa notes “more than half of Australians would prefer to use fingerprints, voice or retina scans in place of PINs when making payments and a quarter are ready for artificial intelligence to do their shopping".
Commercial space flights and flying cars are right up there as some of the technological advances many people would like to see in the future, according to a recent survey of residents in the Asia Pacific region.
Everyone got a bit of what they wanted. No one got everything, that sounds like the basis for a good[…]
Is this article ironic?
The safest way not to get snared is to avoid anything financial on your devices plus do not participate in[…]
Who do we trust here? A professional cloud provider with many customers or a monopolistic ticketing agency that can never[…]
I knew this scam was full of shit because it didn't present any actual evidence of the supposed hacker having[…]